long hair:
Length is shorter than shoulder length, but no longer than the knee. single:
Images depicting only one character.
No one else should be visible in the picture. blush:
Pink or scarlet cheeks. highres:
High resolution images.
An image with this tag should be more than 1700 pixels wide and 700 pixels tall.
This tag is automatically added to images. fringe:
Hair that drapes forward to hang in front of the forehead. Known in British English as a fringe. absurdres:
Very high resolution images. An image with this tag should be at least 3000 pixels wide and 2000 pixels tall. oni horns:
A distinctive feature of the oni horns is that they are located on the forehead and also as rule have a smooth surface. chinese dress:
The cheongsam is a body-hugging one-piece Chinese dress for women; the male version is the changshan.
The English loanword cheongsam comes from chèuhngsāam (Simp./Trad. Chinese: 长衫/長衫, 'long shirt/dress'), the Cantonese pronunciation of the Shanghainese term zǎnze or zansae, by which the original tight-fitting form was first known. The Shanghainese name was somewhat in contrast with usage in Mandarin and other Chinese dialects, where chángshān (the Mandarin pronunciation of 長衫) refers to an exclusively male dress (see changshan) and the female version is known as a qipao.
In Hong Kong, where many Shanghai tailors fled to after the communist revolution in China, the word chèuhngsāam may refer to either male or female garments. The word keipo (qipao) is either a more formal term for the female chèuhngsāam, or is used for the two-piece cheongsam variant that is popular in China. Traditionally, usage in Western countries mostly followed the original Shanghainese usage and applies the Cantonese-language name cheongsam to a garment worn by women.